New York, NY, November 25, 2013
CONTACT: Hiam Simon
212 366-1194
hiam@ameinu.net
www.ameinu.net
Ameinu, the leading grassroots Progressive Zionist organization in North America, joined a coalition of American Jewish organizations to raise serious concerns over legislation pending in the Knesset that could violate Israel’s international and national obligations towards asylum seekers.
A bill that will be considered on first reading today in the Knesset would permit asylum seekers who cannot be deported to be detained in a so-called “open facility,” after one year in administrative detention.
The legislation calls into question Israel’s commitments under the Refugee Convention of 1951 and a recent Israeli High Court ruling that detaining asylum seekers without trial for a minimum of three years violates Israel’s Basic Law on Human Dignity and Liberty. The court ordered that the 1,750 asylum seekers and migrants be individually examined for release before December 15, 2013.
Ameinu, and the Labor Zionist movement, have been deeply engaged in creating a secure and just homeland for the Jewish people for more than 100 years. “Israel has been a sanctuary for Jewish immigrants where our people’s fundamental values animate law and policy,” declared Kenneth Bob, Ameinu’s president. “It has welcomed generations of Jews fleeing persecution to live in freedom and dignity, but now it is on the verge of turning its back on other’s who are seeking protection from the Jewish state. This is totally unacceptable.”
“Ameinu will actively engage the Progressive Zionist community to help defend Israel, both its security and its core values,” added Gideon Aronoff, Ameinu’s CEO. “This is not just a legislative proposal, but an issue that reaches the very soul of Israel and the Jewish people.”
A copy of the coalition letter is included below.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
Office of the Prime Minister
3 Kaplan Street, Qiryat Ben-Gurion
P.O. Box 187, 91919 Jerusalem
Israel
24 November 2013
Dear Mr. Prime Minister,
On 16 September 2013, the High Court of Justice unanimously overturned amendments to the Prevention of Infiltration Law, ruling that administrative detention of asylum seekers without trial for a minimum of three years violates Israel’s Basic Law on Human Dignity and Liberty. The High Court set a deadline of 15 December 2013 by which the cases of some 1,750 asylum seekers and migrants must be individually examined for release.
Despite this ruling, legislation that has been approved by the cabinet and is before the Knesset, calls for the vast majority of these individuals to remain in detention. According to the proposed legislation, asylum seekers who cannot be deported because their life or freedom would be in danger will be transferred to an “open facility,” after one year in administrative detention. Media reports claim they will likely be sent toSadot, in the Negev desert, which can currently hold 3,300 individuals. Furthermore, it is reported that some asylum seekers not currently detained will also be sent to Sadot, which will be run by the Israeli Prison Service. The legislation indicates that they will be required to report in three times a day, to prevent work or flight. Reportedly, there will be no limit on the length of residence in Sadot.
The relative isolation of the Sadot facility, its oversight by the Israel Prison Service, the indefinite duration of the residence and the frequent reporting requirement together suggest an extended form of detention. Further, these conditions call into question whether the policies enumerated in the proposed legislation comport with the High Court’s decision. These requirements also stand in contrast to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees’ 2012 Detention
Guidelines, which would limit detention for asylum seekers to a last resort, noting that detention may not be indefinite or applied retroactively.
As a result, we, the undersigned organizations, urge the Israeli government to release the remaining eligible individuals from detention promptly in accordance with the High Court decision.
In addition, we take this opportunity to encourage the Israeli government, as we have done in previous instances, to ameliorate the condition of asylum seekers in Israel in line with due process and humanitarian considerations by guaranteeing the implementation of full, fair, and transparent refugee status determinationprocedures, which, in accordance with Israel’s obligations under the 1951 UN Refugee Convention and its 1967 Protocol, guarantee access to legal counsel and appropriate interpreters, and an independent appeal process. We further urge that the Israeli authorities provide asylum seekers social services, work or business permits, and freedom of movement, to the extent possible, including (if applicable) in Sadot; and allow asylum seekers to remain in Israel’s urban centers rather than transferring some or all to Sadot or any other “open facility.”
We realize that, in recent years, Israel had become a favored destination for asylum seekers from Africa, primarily Eritrea and Sudan, and that the country now hosts some 55,000 such persons. We recognize that this population had presented a mounting social and demographic challenge easy to underestimate. But Israel’s recent completion of a fence along the border with Egypt has virtually stopped the arrival of new asylum seekers from Africa and has therefore mitigated the growth of this challenge.
As steadfast friends of Israel, we respectfully urge the government to recommit itself to the design and implementation of asylum policies that are consistent with the decisions of Israel’s own independent judiciary, its international law obligations, and our shared Jewish values.
Sincerely,
In alphabetical order:
Gideon Aronoff, Chief Executive Officer, Ameinu
Gal Peleg Laniado, Central Shaliach, Hashomer Hatzair North America
Kali Silverman, Director, Habonim Dror North America
Mark Hetfield, President and CEO, HIAS
E. Robert Goodkind, Chair, Jacob Blaustein Institute for the Advancement of Human Rights of AJC
Rabbi Steve Gutow, President and CEO, Jewish Council for Public Affairs
Rita Freedman, Acting Executive Director, Jewish Labor Committee
Mary Ann Stein, President, The Moriah Fund
Rabbi David Rosenn, Executive Vice President, New Israel Fund
Ron Skolnik, Executive Director, Partners for Progressive Israel
Shauna Leven, Director, René Cassin
Maya Paley, Founder, Right Now
Jill Jacobs, Executive Director, T’ruah: The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights
Deborah Waxman, President, Reconstructionist Rabbinical College/Jewish Reconstructionist Communities